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ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022
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This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022

 

Music power / technical datas

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benoit
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France
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benoit Posted: Thu, May 10 2012 10:42 AM

Hello,

Does anyone know what kind of Watts are used by B&O in their technical datas?

Are they RMS or musical watts or something in-between?

For example the sound of new Beoplay V1 is given for 2x32W... It is not the same if it is RMS or musical as music=2xRMS I think...

bayerische
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bayerische replied on Thu, May 10 2012 10:58 AM

B&O uses RMS, or continuous output. 

Too long to list.... 

benoit
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benoit replied on Thu, May 10 2012 11:07 AM

Thank you!

Søren Hammer
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They used the old DIN-standard until the late 80's. AFAIK, the power output should be doubled to get it up to newer B&O specs; as seen in the Beocenter 9000-series at the time of the changeover. The power output rose from 40 to 80 watts.

Vinyl records, cassettes, open reel, valve amplifiers and film photography.

Dillen
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Dillen replied on Thu, May 10 2012 3:45 PM

Musical watts is pure nonsense, not a standard in any way. Merely a figure that makes it look tougher.
One Watt is one watt.
True power ratings are in RMS. That'll be the lowest figures in the spec listings.

Martin

Rich
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Rich replied on Thu, May 10 2012 6:33 PM

Not to confuse the issue further, but amplifier tests may be run with purely resistive loads, which don't really mimic a loudspeaker's variation of impedance with frequency.  In addition, there should be a sort of footnote with the amplifier rating saying something about the distortion allowed by the test.  For example, 50 watts at <0.5% THD into 8 ohms.

Most useless specification?  Loudspeaker power ratings.  "Hey, these speakers must be great!  They're rated at 150 watts!"


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